EDITORAL hi n ever lnce World W r n on ever be rind union rn n enjoyed unpreceden th care, perity, " LEr ME rAKE 7'#/.5 OPPD�TU""� 7lJ MAKG-,#f RHY�t. FoR. UAI/ TY - As KJfH roOHK,fH SHolAJ.S TOI'f �6 be"",,:> r .s�E J r.s T/"'� ro HE"IL _ S 0n.::z::- /,vV I 'TI:: »u: R£PO�T�R.s /AI 7?Y£ �"O� o ;tIT'Jl:AlJ) 1'1 Y PAil/VCR. BII.£"'K�q- "r;;t,DAI/ -ItEV. U3 AAItH VIEWS OPINIONS • • • AI whi - inned "domin ted th However, the money-big id p- money. If Black women had been fin ncially trong white women, the merchants certainly would have found ways to get orne of that Black money by glamorizing "BI ck beauties" in order to 11 expensive clothing, jewelry and other female- trink • -, , I' ;0 00 · " " Thomas' bad record on civil rights was very well known. In the case of Black women, BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL. But in the case of Clarence Thorn ,BLACK IS UGLY. • " " " 00 o B C TO th first ex­ ample. Insofar co metics are con­ cerned, the idea that light- kinned women look better than d r - kinned women ha een drummed " I , " I' ': E1.E�Atn'? ,WHAT , a.EPHANT? \ 'he Blind M.en and t.beElephan.t A'#NI. i�ER& NO'1l4INEJ 1'0'" ! , I exposed to and poisoned by lead. No percentage of children in any communi ty should be deemed "socially acceptable" in regard to lead posioning.. This issue is the glaring disproportionality of lead posioning when it comes to children in people of color communities. Al though numerous national studfes have confirmed that people of color communities in the United States have a dangerously high level of lead in the blood of their children, there still bas not been a national outcry effectively strong enough to change this situation. The Center for Disease Control (CDC), based in Atlanta, Georgia, bas called for lowering the acceptable level of lead in blood from 25 micrograms per deciliter to 10 micrograms. The new action by the CDC is the result of new medical evidence documenting the fact that serious negative health effects are caused by far lower levels of lead in blood than previously assumed. It i generally �� .. �tJ.ead poisoning cau es deere ed Intelligence, learning disabilities, anemia, convulsions, hypertension, kidney disease and various kinds of adolescent cancer. There are many in the public education sector ho focus on what b been identified m tiple "I d • of color children primary and secondary cbool systems. Yet, we believe, there needs to be a more oomprehen ive understanding of " " t , I " " I • " , , " " , " I " " I' few days ago, we gave testi before the United States House 'Qf Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommi ttee on Heal th and the Environment. The focus of that Congressional hearing as the issue 0 lead posoning, particularly among a high percentage of children in the United States. Congressman Waxman (D-CA.) wa the Chairman of the Subcommittee and was one of the sponsors of the Lead Contamination Control Act Amendments of 1992. We supported this legislation because we feel that it will strengthen the enforcement of regulations in regard to human exposure to lead. In addi tion, the passage of the Waxman Bill would begin to Significantly prevent the unchecked and indiscrimnant use of lead in paint and in other substances which pose a dangerous threat to public heal tho For African-American, Hispanic-American, Native American and Asian-American communitie , the is ue of lead poi oning, like other environmental issues, is an issue of life and death. It bas been reported that 70 percent of urban African and Hispanic American children have a dangerous level of Ie d in their blood, oppo cd to 35 percent of hite Cbildft. in milar circumstances. " " " ,: ': top I .ad poi' .oning of our child� n! LET US BE clear. We are opposed to any community being I " I' I I' what are the causative factors that lead to the high rate of learning disabilities in these communities. CIVIL RIGHTS JOURNA� OUR POINT HERE is to emphasize that in addition to. poverty and other socioeconomic factors, there i the growing' awareness that a key factor is the rising lead po ioning in children from these communities, Once again we are obligated to point out the role that race plays concerning this issue. The high level of lead posioning in urban people of color communities is integrally' connected to patterns of residential segregation based on race. Raci m in America consigns large numbers of children who are born in people of color communities to an unfair, unjust and an immoral situation where the "cards" of society are painfully stacked against them. BENJAMIN CHAVIS announced EPA's opposi tion to H.R. 2840, the Lead Contamination Control Act Amendments of 1992. Why in the world would the one federal agency with the statutory responsibility to protect this nation's children and adults from environmental �ards go t Capitol Hill to oppose the Waxman Bill? The EPA claimed their oppo ition was based on "no need for further regulation" and that the Waxman Bill would cost toe much. Who would it "cost too much?" No TH� CIVIL RIGHT child' life or future should be Movement and the emerging. sacrificed on the altar of environmental justice Movement Reagan-Busb politic. We must become effective advocates for encourage you to contact every the rights and plight of our children. member of Congress to demand' We were, therefore, encouraged to passage of the Waxman Bill and all shareourtestimonybeforeCongress other legislation, like the on a panel that included the head of Environmental Justice Act of 1992, the NAACP Legal Defense and . which seek to ens ure the Educational Fund, Attom y Jull non-di �rimantory protection of e ery cbUd in t' nation from eDViroDJDeDIIl degradation. I , ,. To 0 y, rep tatives of the United States Environmental Protection Agency later testified during the same hearin and -- ' . '